Here and There
By Bobby Terrell
Catamounts Last Second Pass
Beats Lenoir-Rhyne 13-7
Etheridge Shatters Collar
Bone Catching Pass; Is
Now In Mission Hospital I
With only seconds remaining in i
the game, Jim English hurled a |
35 yard pass to the endzone and |
into the hands of Clyde Etheridge
to provide the Catamounts of
Western Carolina a 13 - 7 victory !
over the Lenoir-Rhyne Bears at j
Cullowhee Saturday night. It was
the most exciting finish ever wit- j
nessed by Catamour\jt football fans
and was certainly one for the
movies. Etheridge, the hard luck, ,
third string end who had broken 1
his nose earlier in the season, was
brought to the ground so violently
brought tot he ground so violently
by two Lenoir-Rhyne men that he
. suffered a shattered collar bone.
Two minutes before the final
whistle the Cats were trailing 7-0.
Lenoir-Rhyne had the ball with
third and 6 on their own 23. Quar
terback John Charles attempted
to punt out but Clark Pennell
broke through the Bear's line to
block the kick and cover the ball
in the endzone for a touchdown.
Ralph Clark booted the extra
point and the game was tied 7-7.
Western Carolina kicked of to
the 39 and the Beai^ picked up
11 yards on two plays for a first
down but were penalized 15 yards
for unnecessary roughness on the
next play. They attempted three
passes, all incomplel^, and the ball
went to the Cats. Then English
connected4 Etheridge with his
touchdown pass and the final
whistle blew with the ball in mid
When Your
Back Hurts
And Tour Strength and
Energy Is Below Par
It may be caused by disorder of kid
ney (unction that permits poisonous
waste to accumulate. For truly many
people feel tired, weak and miserable
when the kidneys fail to remove exctss
acids and other waste matter from the
blood.
You may 3uffer nagging backache,
rheumatic pains, headaches, dizziness,
getting up nights, leg pains, swelling.
Sometimes frequent ana scanty urina
tion with smarting and burning is an
other sign that something is wrong with
the kidneys or bladder.
There should be no doubt that prompt
treatment is wiser than neglect. Use
Doan't Pills. It is better to rely on a
medicine that has won countrywide ap
proval than on something less favorably
Known. Doan'a have been tried and test
ed many vears. Are at all drug stores.
Get Doan ? today.
STATISTICS
Cullowhee, N. C., Oct 18?Sta
tistics of the Western Carolina?
Lenoir-Rhyne game:
WCTC L.H.
First downs 12 8
Net yards gained rushing.. 115 57
Fwd. passes attempted 18 17
Fwd. passes completed .... 6 6
Yards gained fwd. passes.. 77 82
Fwd. passes intercepted by
1 3
Yards gained runback
interceptions 8 58
scrimmage 40.3 31.8
returned 34 21
Yards lost by penalties 15 60
air. Clark missed the conversion
but the Cats had the long end of
the thrilling 13-7 decision.
The teams fought a scoreless
first period with both sides threat
ening. The Cats drove inside the
20, fumbled and lost the ball. The
Bears intercepted one of Jim Bry
son's passes on their own 41 and
returned it 48 yards to the 11. Har
ry Jaynes recovered a Lenoir
Rhyne fumble on the 4 and Bry
son kicked out to the 45.
The Bears marched to the 12
where Dan Robinson, Western
Carolina tackle, intercepted Char
les' pass and returned it to the 18.
The ball changed hands twice on
kicks with Lenoir-Rhyne kicking
to the 6 where the quarter ended.
At the opening of the second
period the Bears marched from
the 35 to the 18. Charles passed
to Little in the endzone for the
touchdown. Bonasorte converted
for the 7-0 lead that was untouch
ed until the final two minutes.
Scoring W. C. T. C. touchdowns:
Pennell, Etheridge. Points after:
Clark (placement).
Scoring Lenoir-Rhyne touch
down: Little. Point after Bona
sorte (placement).
( The Lineups;
WCTC Pos. L-R
Grogan . LE Coyne
Jaynes LT Confer
Pennel LG Carlton
Lemmond, C Hill
I Byrd RG Barger
| Robinson RT R. Frye
1 Brown RE Little
Clark QB Charles
Bryson LH -.V.-Painter
Heavener RH Heafner
Harris FB Ostwalt
Western Carolina 0 " 0" 0 13-13
Lenoir-Rhyne 0 7 0 0-7
Western. Carolina subs: Allison,
Etheridge, Barnwell, Neal, Hum
phries, Scates, Powell, Ilderton,
p IT7 theatre
1 r% I I WEEKLY PROGRAM
Night Shows; 7:00 & 9:00 P. M.? Mat. Sat.?Late show Sat. 10:30
Adm.:Adults 36c tax incl.?Children under 12 yrs. 12c tax Inc.
Thursday-Friday, October 3D, 31
TARZAN AND THE HUNTRESS
JOHNNY WEISSM ULLER AND BRENDA JOYCE
Saturday, November 1
OREGON TRAIL SCOUTS
RED RYDER
Late Show 10:30?
FALL GUY
CLIFFORD PENN AND ROBERT ARMSTRONG
Sunday, November 2
THE FABULOUS DORSEYS
TOMMY AND JIMMY DORSEY AND JANET BLAIR
Monday-Tuesday, November 3, 4
THE HOMESTRETCH
CARNEL WILDE AND MURREN O'HARA
Wednesday, November 5
BANJO
SHARYN MOFFITT AND WALTER REED
All Children not In arms will have to purchase a ticket to entsr
any pe-^r^ - - *? at tM? Theatre.
Stages Comeback
A MAN without a party six months
ago. Gen. Charles de Gaulle (above)
has emerged as the new strong man
of French politics following the mu
nicipal elections which placed his
anti-left Rally of the French Peo
ple far ahead of the Communists.
The general's most striking Victory
was in Paris, wh ?* his brother,
Pierre, was elocu . to the council
and was exported to be named
the city's Mayor. (International)
Ninth Air Force Has ?
Open Assignment At
Greenville Air Base
T-Sgt. James R. Dance, of the 1
Franklirt Sub-Staticn of the United 1
States Army and United States !
Air Force Recruiting Service an
nounced today that there are a
large number of open assignments
with the Ninth Air Force at the
Greenville Air Base, Greenville,
S. C., Shaw Field, Sumter, S. C.,
and Langley Field, Virginia. These
j assignments call for many mil
j itary occupational specialties, and
| they must be filled by former ser
i vicemen with those specialties.
I Any Air Force veteran of World
! War II, who is interested in one
of these initial assignments, should
contact the local Recuiting Sub
I Station or an Army and Air Force
i Recruiting Sergeant to ascertain
| if his military occupational spec
| ialty is among those listed as crit
ically needed at these installations.
If so, and he can qualify for en
| listment, he will be initially as
signed to duty at one of these
| three bases.
I Army Recruiting Sergeant is
hm-Sylva every Monday and Wed
! nesday.
iy GEORGE S. BENSON
^ President? Harding Cctlejc
m Searcy .Arkansas
LOOKING
AHEAD
140 Million Capitalists
"Soak the Rich" used to be quite
a popular slogan in some quarters.
Whether the same words are used
today, the same idea still appeals to
a large number of people. The plan
put forward by these folks boils
down to one main issue:limit the in
comes of citizens in the high brack
ets and divide it among the other
people. By putting more money in
the hands of more people they hope
to attain a greater prosperity.
However, this economic Utopia
theory runs afoul of economic fact
and economic law. Its basic^plat
fofm is hinged on the idea that most
of the nation's money is held by a
comparative few. A greater mis
conception is hardly- possible. In the
light of sound reasoning and cold
statistics, the absurdity of this no
tion is obvious. No other civilization
has seen a more equitable distribu
tion of wealth among its people.
For example, a tabulation of mm
come tax returns for 1942 shows the
full impact of the results of our
American system. In that year the
group ol individuals receiving in
come of less than $5,000 annually,
representing 96 per cent of the coun
try's population, pnid 47 per cent of
all federal personal income taxes.
^This, too, is the group which since
1931 has averaged at least 88 per
cent of the nation's annual income.
In comparison, some 1,321,000
people reported incomes in excess
of $5,000 during the same year. This
group?approximately 4 per cent of
the population?paid 53 per cent of
all federal personal income taxes.
In the above-$5,000 group, only 22.3
per cent of their income came from I
interest, dividends, rents, royalties,
and fiduciaries. This is a far cry
from the well worn "coupon clip
pers" line of attack of radical
planners.
Curiously enough, the lower in
come groups are far from being the
underdog in distribution of income
from these sources. The above
*
$5,000 group was responsible for 37
per cent of allincome from interest,
dividends, and fiduciaries, while the
below-$5,000 group pocketed 63 per
cent of the income from the same
sources. The lower Income groups
have a large stake in the nation's
business and industry. (
If these planners could limit the i
incomes of all individuals to $10,000 |
before taxes and other tixed
charges, some $5.2 billion would be
available for distribution to the
lesser income people. Representing
little more than 4 per cent of the -
national income, it would amount to
only $40 per capita?provided, of
course, that there had been no eco
nomic or financial loss in the proc
ess of redistribution.
This would be a costly price to
pay for the destruction of incentive,
which would inevitably follow. Most
"venture" capital would disappear.
Since this is the source of all indus
trial progress, the immediate and
certain result would be a breaking
down cl Uie national economy, a re
duction national income and of
individual income. Freedom of the
individual and his unlimited incen
tive for gain are dependent on each 1
other. This way, everyone beneiits. '
The People's Money
All Groups Share
t
Constance, Ar'rington, English 1
McConnell, Hunt, Hensley and
Roberston.
Lenoir-Rhyne subs: Sechrist,
j Abee, Wienstein, Odom, Cordell,
Bonasorte, Clouse, Miller, Martin.
1 Officials: Austin, referee; De
I Hines, Umpire; Breedland, Head
i Linesman; Spencer, Field Judge.
Martin county farmers are def
initely turning to a livestock pro
1 gram in view of the expected cut
| in tobacco and peanuts4?or an
other year.
CARD <?F THANKS
We wish to express our sincere
thanks and appreciation to our
many friends and relatives who
so kindly extended aid and sym
pathy during the illness and death
of our loved one. Also for the
beautiful floral offerings.
Mrs. Lawrence Buchanan and
family.
Every 38 seconds fire breaks out
in the United States. Every IV2
minutes an American dwelling
catches fire. Every 50 minutes a
! person dies in a fire or from burns.
FARM FOR SALE IN GREENVILLE CO., S. C.
151 Acres, one large 7-room, 2-story house with lights
and water, electric pump. One 6-room house, 3 good
%
barns. This property is about 13 miles from Green
ville on a good paved highway ... 100 acres in culti
vation, 25 acres in woods and 25 in pasture.
There is no place in the entire South that has more
to offer in the way of good land, good schools, and a
bigger variety of industrial plants than this section. -
Plenty of smaller farms and komes of all classes.
30 YEARS EXPERIENCE HANDLING REAL ESTATE.
C. V. Lathan
*
211 Blue Bldg.
Phone 337 Greenville, S. C.
RECEIVES FREEDOM HOUSE AWARD
*
^ SECRETARY OP ST ATE George (J Marshall (left) receives the 1 y 47 Freedom
House Award from Befrnord M Baruclv (right), the irMfi winner, at the
organization's annual dinner in New York Mnrshnll won the award
for his services to the cause of peace, freedom and democracy Looking
*n is Dr. HArry D. Gideonse. Freedom House president. (International)
j Funeral Riies for
Walter Frizzell Held
[n Washington
Funeral services were held in
Ft. Meyer chapel on Tuesday,
October 21, at 2 o'clock for Walter
Daniel Frizzell, who died at Mc
Guire Veterans Hospital,, Rich
mond, Friday evening, October 17.
Chaplain Cassidy of the U. S.
Navy officiated. Burial was in
Arlington National cemetery and
graveside rites were conducted by
the Cooley-McCullough American
Legion post of which Mr. Frizzell
was a member. Pallbearers were
members of the post.
Mr. Frizzell. youngest son of the
late W. D. and Ellen Frizzell of
Webster, was born June 22, 1895.
During the first World War he
served in the U. S. Navy, later
going to Washington, D. C. where
he worked in the navy department
until his last illness overtook him.
Home folks attending were Mr.
and Mrs. Alvin Montieth, Mr. and
Mrs. Curtiss Frizzell, Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis Buchanan, >lr. and Mrs.
Julian McElheiney, Mr. and Mrs.
James Swaggerty, Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Henry Buchanan, Misses
Manilla and Hilda Buchanan, Miss
Delia Childers and Glen Buchanan.
Surviving are his widow, Bonnie
Bryson Frizzell; four daughters, ;
Mrs. Travis H. Wilson, Mrs. Carl
W. Kettenbach, Mrs. Gerald Hines
and.Nancy Frizzell; three brothers,
John Frizzell, Webster, Will
o f Bluff Dale, T e x a s a n d
Lawrence of Geneseo, N. Y.;
three sisters, Mrs. Florence Buch- '
anan, Webster; Mrs. Julia Stewart
)
of Erastus, and Miss Nan Frizzell,
Arlington, Va.
? The U. S. Department of Agri
culture has announced that the
Commodity Credit Corporation
will buy rice on a competitive bid
basis to meet export requirements.
EYES EXAMINED
Glasses Fitted
DR. ALDEN C. DOWNS
will examine eyes and fit glasses
in Sylva at the Carolina Hotel
Friday, Nov. 7, from 9 o'clock
to 4 o'clock.
If you have eye trouble or
can't see well you should con
sult Dr. Downs on above date.
LAXATIVE
Triena it the laxative for children un
der 12. Acts promptly and thoroughly
to relieve sluggishness, irritability and
sour stomach due to faulty elimino*
tion. Made with senna. Flavored witW
prune-juice. No upsetdi
gestion with TRIENA.
Co ution: use only os
directed. 30c, large -
siie, 50c
Triena
ALLIED DRUG
PRODUCTS CO
ChjttjnooRj Tt-nr..
Esterbrook
Fou'ntain Pens
T?
Products of America's first penmaker. Choose
your favorite?the right point for the way you
write.
We have a supply of extra points, instantly re
placeable by the user.
Try these dependable, economical pens.
THE BOOK STORE
In Th<? llorald IKuilding
Phone 110 * Main Street
VSU'LL SAVE MONEY AT
TRUCK HEADQUARTERS
'4M.
WITH
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? Oil-saving aluminum-alloy pistons,
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? ECONOMY plus . . . because every
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REMEMBER / ON'.Y DODGE
fftOM
the Right One of 7 Great Truck Engines!
? Lower service expense with exhaust
valve seat Inserts!
I
? Engine parts protected with oil
filters, oil-bath air cleaners and
full-pressure lubrication!
? Full-length water jackets Increase
engine efficiency, reduce wear!
BUI IDS "TR U C KS
r -r
mm
pi
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COGDILL MOTOR COMPANY
Mill and Main Streets
Sylva, N. C.